4CE Pros and Cons


This page will be used to gather information for your project. As you read through material on the Internet and in books, you will record the facts for both pro and con on this page. You will also add the resource for your information through an Internet link or the title of your print resource.



Pros:
#1. The dam will stop many floods which might kill tons of people.
#2. The dam will make navigation for boats easier in the once dangerous waters.
#3. The dam will generate more than 10% of china's electricity,reducing the amount of coal burned each year.
#4. Huge funds are being spent cleaning waste that threatens both water and dam.
#5. More ships could travel further on Yangtze because of the dam's lock.
#6. The dam will greatly increase human and goods transportation.
#7. During drought, the Three Gorges Dam will still be able to supply water to the surrounding area.
#8. The dam is able to tame the raging Yangtze- one of the world's most dangerous rivers.

Cons:
#1. The dam will create a huge reservoir that will flood many cities, towns, scenic areas , and ancient artifacts.
#2. The water in the upper stream is becoming very dirty because the flow is not fast enough to wash the pollution away.
#3. The dam slows the river's flow, so the river silt can't be washed away.
#4. The dam blocks many of the river animals from moving through the river, decreasing river animal population.
#5. The Three Gorges Dam has flooded 13 cities, 140 towns, and 1350 villages.
#6. The dam is one of the reasons why the Baiji river dolphin, Chinese river surgeon,Siberian crane and the Giant Panda are endangered or functionally extinct.
#7. The reservoir will also submerge rare flowers that are in the Three Gorges area.
#8. The silt that piles up behind the dam cannot flow out, so farmland below the dam is less fertile.
#9. The dam is constructed right on a fault line, and is even predicted to cause earthquakes.
#10. The rising waters caused by the dam has relocated 300,000 people and landslides and mudflows are further forcing 28,600 people to move.
Questions raised: